Current:Home > StocksTikTok to limit the time teens can be on the app. Will safeguards help protect them?--DB Wealth Institute B2 Reviews Insights
TikTok to limit the time teens can be on the app. Will safeguards help protect them?
View Date:2025-01-19 15:20:45
Jelena Kecmanovic is a psychologist who works with teenagers struggling with their mental health. "Almost every one of our sessions starts with what happened on TikTok or Instagram," she says.
Kecmanovic also heads a practice group of other mental health professionals who work with adolescents. So when TikTok announced last week that it would roll out new usage limits for users under 18 in the United States, she and her colleagues looked closely at the new safeguards.
Those safeguards include default settings for users under 13 that require parental permission to continue using the app after 60 minutes on TikTok in one day. Users between the ages of 13 and 17 will be asked to enter their own passcode to continue using TikTok after 60 minutes of daily use. Users under 18 will be asked to set their own usage limits if they opt out of the default setting.
When Kecmanovic dug into the details of TikTok's new policies, she was disappointed. "It's not enough," she told NPR's A Martinez.
She compared teens on TikTok to adults who gamble on slot machines: "Maybe you're winning. You're on a good streak and it's middle of the night and your defenses are down. And then something shows up in front of the slot machine saying, 'you've been on too long, it's middle of the night. Maybe you should reconsider.' How many people would stop?"
Kecmanovic says teens' excessive use of TikTok isn't necessarily a reflection of their poor impulse control.
"I really don't think this is that much about teens not having self-control. I think it's about the design of social media that's basically like slot machines."
TikTok's parent company ByteDance already has much stricter usage limits for kids who use its apps in China because of the Chinese government's efforts to regulate teenagers' use of technology. In 2021 ByteDance moved to cut off access to Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, for users under age 14 after 40 minutes of daily use. Kids are also blocked from accessing the app every night between 10pm and 6am.
Kecmanovic told NPR's A Martinez that ByteDance's policies for adolescent users in China are much closer to the type of policies she and her colleagues recommend to families who are struggling with the negative effects of kids' social media use.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Some of the excerpts include some quotes from the interview that were not aired in the broadcast version.
Interview excerpts
On how the teenagers she works with perceive their own use of apps like TikTok
I would say majority of our teens are aware that this is not helping. And yet they say 'I can't help it. There's FOMO, I don't like it. I know it puts me in a worse mood. I feel really yucky in the morning, especially if I'm doing it until middle of the night and it's replacing my sleep or during the day. It's replacing any other activities that might be actually purposeful and meaningful and joyful. I feel terrible. And yet, what am I missing? Everybody else is using it. I have to be on it.' So they have this compulsion on one hand, and also the sense that if I'm not doing it, I'll really be left out. But on the other hand, there is a sense this is not helping me.
On how kids can spend a healthy amount of time on social media
In any given sitting, not more than 15 minutes. We know that going down these very unhelpful and hurtful rabbit holes is particularly pernicious. So being on any given social media for past 15 minutes, you get into worse and worse and worse psychological state. And we know that it's much more helpful, actually, to be on it twice a day for 15 minutes than being on it in one sitting for half an hour.
For all social media, the longer you stay on it, some research has shown you tend to get more extreme content. And you end up in this space where you really feel compulsive.
On the added burden TikTok's new features could place on parents
We work with kids who have parents that are very involved and have more time than a lot of other parents. And even they say 'I just can't deal with this. It's too much, I trust that I raised my kids well enough that they will figure out what's appropriate.' But we don't have option because the data show that this is really, really, really deleterious for kids health.
What parents really can do is to create family spaces and times when everybody's off. We call it a family media plan. Because we are also the biggest models for kids and we use our phones too much. We're on screens too much, we use social media too much. We are distracted all the time. So creating really important conversations around the dinner table and with family, that everybody at 10:00 pm, let's say, logs off. No usage of social media privately in your room or bathroom. When we go on a hike trip, nobody nobody's on it. At the dinner table, all of us are off it. I think that's where there's a space for parents to start modeling these kinds of more helpful behaviors and relating to technology in a different way.
On what else apps like TikTok should be doing to reduce the harm their product does to teen users in the United States
The idea that [the app] shuts off during certain periods [for teen users], I think that absolutely should be the case. Access to social media in the bedroom of teens or tweens until the wee hours of the morning is incredibly, incredibly harmful.
We have some really interesting studies that show that even if you turn off notifications, just a phone laying in front of you if you have two people eating dinner together, their level of connection as they reported later is going to suffer. I mean, just having that phone right there, you're being aware of it. So I would love to see contexts, times of day, times of night in which it would automatically shut off.
veryGood! (322)
Related
- Bev Priestman fired as Canada women’s soccer coach after review of Olympic drone scandal
- How much prison time could Trump face if convicted on Espionage Act charges? Recent cases shed light
- Hollywood goes on strike as actors join writers on picket lines, citing existential threat to profession
- FBI Director Chris Wray defends agents, bureau in hearing before House GOP critics
- Does the NFL have a special teams bias when hiring head coaches? History indicates it does
- After Hurricane Harvey, a Heated Debate Over Flood Control Funds in Texas’ Harris County
- Groundhog Day 2023
- Man accused of trying to stab flight attendant, open door mid-flight deemed not competent to stand trial, judge rules
- Why Officials Believe a Missing Kayaker Faked His Own Death and Ran Off to Europe
- Inside Clean Energy: How Soon Will An EV Cost the Same as a Gasoline Vehicle? Sooner Than You Think.
Ranking
- Maryland man wanted after 'extensive collection' of 3D-printed ghost guns found at his home
- Southwest's COO will tell senators 'we messed up' over the holiday travel meltdown
- Vitamix Flash Deal: Save 44% On a Blender That Functions as a 13-In-1 Machine
- 15 Products to Keep Your Pets Safe & Cool This Summer
- ‘I got my life back.’ Veterans with PTSD making progress thanks to service dog program
- Could Migration Help Ease The World's Population Challenges?
- Why the EPA puts a higher value on rich lives lost to climate change
- Support These Small LGBTQ+ Businesses During Pride & Beyond
Recommendation
-
Olivia Munn Randomly Drug Tests John Mulaney After Mini-Intervention
-
Inside Clean Energy: Rooftop Solar Could Lose Big in Federal Regulatory Case
-
Disney's Bob Iger is swinging the ax as he plans to lay off 7,000 workers worldwide
-
The Beigie Awards: All about inventory
-
Maryland man wanted after 'extensive collection' of 3D-printed ghost guns found at his home
-
The Indicator Quiz: Inflation
-
Panama Enacts a Rights of Nature Law, Guaranteeing the Natural World’s ‘Right to Exist, Persist and Regenerate’
-
Everything You Need To Know About That $3 Magic Shaving Powder You’re Seeing All Over TikTok